A Sandstorm Came to Gaza — Even War Doesn’t Stop Nature

Sandstorms in Gaza during active conflict create a specific kind of compounded suffering that doesn’t fit easily into either humanitarian reporting or military analysis. The storm doesn’t distinguish between combatants and civilians, between intact buildings and rubble. It adds respiratory distress to a population already under severe medical constraint, in a region where healthcare infrastructure has been extensively damaged.

There is something clarifying about natural events in conflict zones. They demonstrate that the people experiencing war are also experiencing the full range of ordinary human vulnerability — to weather, to illness, to the ordinary difficulties of staying alive. The sandstorm is not a metaphor. It is an additional problem for people who already have too many.


Analysis based on public reporting. Global Watch Japan.

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